12 research outputs found

    Pantropical variability in tree crown allometry

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    Aim Tree crowns determine light interception, carbon and water exchange. Thus, understanding the factors causing tree crown allometry to vary at the tree and stand level matters greatly for the development of future vegetation modelling and for the calibration of remote sensing products. Nevertheless, we know little about large‐scale variation and determinants in tropical tree crown allometry. In this study, we explored the continental variation in scaling exponents of site‐specific crown allometry and assessed their relationships with environmental and stand‐level variables in the tropics. Location Global tropics. Time period Early 21st century. Major taxa studied Woody plants. Methods Using a dataset of 87,737 trees distributed among 245 forest and savanna sites across the tropics, we fitted site‐specific allometric relationships between crown dimensions (crown depth, diameter and volume) and stem diameter using power‐law models. Stand‐level and environmental drivers of crown allometric relationships were assessed at pantropical and continental scales. Results The scaling exponents of allometric relationships between stem diameter and crown dimensions were higher in savannas than in forests. We identified that continental crown models were better than pantropical crown models and that continental differences in crown allometric relationships were driven by both stand‐level (wood density) and environmental (precipitation, cation exchange capacity and soil texture) variables for both tropical biomes. For a given diameter, forest trees from Asia and savanna trees from Australia had smaller crown dimensions than trees in Africa and America, with crown volumes for some Asian forest trees being smaller than those of trees in African forests. Main conclusions Our results provide new insight into geographical variability, with large continental differences in tropical tree crown allometry that were driven by stand‐level and environmental variables. They have implications for the assessment of ecosystem function and for the monitoring of woody biomass by remote sensing techniques in the global tropics

    Data package from 'Pantropical variability in tree crown allometry' Global Ecology and Biogeography 2021

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    Aim: Tree crowns determine light interception, carbon and water exchange. Thus, understanding the factors causing tree crown allometry to vary at the tree and stand level matters greatly for the development of future vegetation modelling and for the calibration of remote sensing products. Yet, we know little about large-scale variation and determinants in tropical tree crown allometry. In this study, we explored the continental variation in scaling exponents of site-specific crown allometry and assessed their relationships with environmental and stand-level variables in the tropics

    Chlamydia pneumoniae Serology: Importance of Methodology in Patients with Coronary Heart Disease and Healthy Individuals

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    Most publications on the relationship between infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae and coronary heart disease (CHD) propose an association, but negative studies are also reported. Seroepidemiological studies vary in the use of different serological methods, different cutoff limits, different sampling times in relation to acute cardiac events, and different clinical stages of CHD. We wanted to compare three different commercially available methods for measuring Chlamydia antibodies to see how the choice of method influenced the prevalence of seropositive individuals in CHD patients and in healthy individuals and to see if sampling time in relation to an acute cardiac event or the stage of atherothrombotic disease influenced the results. Blood samples from 197 CHD patients and 197 individually matched healthy control individuals were tested at baseline and after 6 months; the mean age was 55 years in both groups, and 18% were women. Among the CHD patients, 166 were included at a median of 16 days after an acute cardiac event and 31 had chronic disease with the latest acute event being >3 months earlier. The difference in prevalence of antibodies between the CHD patients and the healthy controls was significant when Chlamydia lipopolysaccharide antibodies were measured, while no significant differences between the study groups were observed by the two methods detecting Chlamydia pneumoniae major outer membrane protein antibodies. The number of seropositive individuals was quite similar at inclusion and 6 months later, and no significant differences were observed between patients with a recent cardiac event and those with a more remote cardiac event. We conclude that the choice of serological method is of major importance when evaluating a possible relationship between C. pneumoniae and CHD
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